THE following correspondence has just passed with the Chancellor of
the Exchequer:—2

"SIR,—As one of a body of working Naturalists deeply
interested in the fate of the Natural History Collections now in the
British Museum, I am requested to transmit for your consideration the
enclosed Memorial, which we believe to express the views of a large
number of persons engaged in the pursuit of science, although it has
not been considered necessary to send it round for general signature.
We also understand that it has the full concurrence of Sir William
Hooker3 and others whose official situation prevents their actually
joining in it.

"Should you desire to receive any personal explanation of our views
we shall be happy to form a deputation to wait upon you at
whatever time you may be pleased to appoint.

"I have the honour, &c.,

(Signed) "JOHN LINDLEY."4

To the Right Honourable the Chancellor of the
Exchequer.

SIR,—The necessity of the removal of the Natural History Departments
from the British Museum having been recently brought prominently before
the Public, and it being understood that the question of their
reorganisation in another locality is under consideration, the
undersigned Zoologists and Botanists, professionally or otherwise
engaged in the pursuit of Natural Science, feel it their duty to lay
before Her Majesty's Government the views they entertain as to the
arrangements by which National Collections in Natural History can be
best adapted to the twofold object of the advancement of Science, and
its general diffusion among the Public—to show how far the Scientific
Museums of the Metropolis and its vicinity, in their present condition,
answer these purposes,—and to suggest such modifications or additional
arrangements as appear requisite to render them more thoroughly
efficient.

The Scientific Collections or Museums, whether Zoological or
Botanical, required for the objects above stated, may be arranged under
the following heads:—

1. A general and comprehensive Typical or Popular
Museum, in which all prominant forms or types of Animals and
Plants, recent or fossil, should be so displayed as to give the Public
an idea of the vast extent and variety of natural objects, to diffuse a
general knowledge of the results obtained by Science in their
investigation and classification, and to serve as a general
introduction to the Student of Natural History.

2. A complete Scientific Museum, in which Collections of
all obtainable Animals and Plants, and their parts, whether recent or
fossil, and of a sufficient number of specimens, should be disposed
conveniently for study; and to which should be exclusively attached an
appropriate Library, or Collection of Books and
Illustrations relating to Science, wholly independent of any general
Library.

3. A comprehensive Economic Museum, in which Economic
Products, whether Zoological or Botanical, with Illustrations of the
processes by which they are obtained and applied to use, should be so
disposed as best to assist the progress of Commerce and the Arts.

4. Collections of Living Animals and Plants, or Zoological and
Botanical Gardens.

The Typical or Popular Museum, for the daily
use of the general Public, which might be advantageously annexed to the
Scientific Museum, would require a large building, in a light,
airy, and accessible situation. The Collections should be displayed in
spacious galleries, in glass cases, so closed as to protect them from
the dirt and dust raised by the thousands who would visit them; and
sufficient room should be allowed within the cases to admit of affixing
to the specimens, without confusion, their names, and such
illustrations as are necessary to render them intelligible and
instructive to the Student and the general Public.

The Economic Museums and Living Collections in
Botany might be quite independent of the Zoological ones.

The Scientific Museum, in Zoology as in Botany, is the
most important of all. It is indispensable for the study of Natural
Science, although not suited for public exhibition. Without it, the
Naturalist cannot even name or arrange the materials for the Typical,
Economic, or Living Collections, so as to convey any
useful information to the Public. The specimens, though in need of the
same conditions of light, airiness, &c., as, and far more numerous
than, those exposed in the Typical or Popular Museum,
would occupy less space; and they would require a different
arrangement, in order that the specimens might, without injury, be
frequently taken from their receptacles for examination. This Scientific
Museum, moreover, would be useless unless an appropriate Library
were included in the same building.

The union of the Zoological and Botanical Scientific
Museums in one locality is of no importance. The juxtaposition of
each with its corresponding Living Collection is desirable,
but not necessary—although, in the case of Botany, an extensive
Herbarium and Library are indispensable appendages to the Garden and
Economic Museum.

——

The existing Natural History Collections accessible to Men of
Science and to the Public, in or near the Metropolis, are the
following:—

IN BOTANY.—The Kew Herbarium, as a Scientific Collection,
is the finest in the world; and its importance is universally
acknowledged by Botanists. It has an excellent Scientific Library
attached to it; it is admirably situated; and being in proximity with,
and under the immediate control of the Head of the Botanic Garden, it
supersedes the necessity of a separate Herbarium for the use of that
Garden and Museum. But a great part of it is not the property of the
State; there is no building permanently appropriated for its
accommodation, and it does not include any Collection of Fossil Plants.

The Botanical Collection of the British Museum, consisting chiefly
of the Banksian Herbarium, is important, but very imperfect. It is
badly situated, on account of the dust and dirt of Great Russell
Street; and the want of space in the existing buildings of the British
Museum would prevent its extension, even were there an adequate
advantage in maintaining, at the cost of the State, two Herbaria or
Scientific Botanic Museums so near together as those of London and Kew.
The British Museum also contains a valuable Collection of Fossil
Plants, but not more readily available for Science than its Zoological
Collections.

There exists no Typical or Popular Botanical Museum for public
inspection.

The efficiency of the Botanical Gardens and Museum of Economic
Botany at Kew, as now organised, and the consequent advantages to
Science and the Public, are too generally recognised to need any
comment on the part of your Memorialists.

IN ZOOLOGY.—The British Museum contains a magnificent
Collection of Recent and Fossil Animals, the property of the State, and
intended both for public exhibition and for scientific use. But there
is no room for its proper display, nor for the provision of the
necessary accommodation for its study—still less for the separation of
a Popular Typical series for public inspection, apart from
the great mass of specimens whose importance is appreciated only by
professed Naturalists. And, in the attempt to combine the two, the
Public are only dazzled and confused by the multiplicity of unexplained
objects, densely crowded together on the shelves and cases; the man of
science is, for three days in the week, deprived of the opportunity of
real study; and the specimens themselves suffer severely from the dust
and dirt of the locality, increased manifold by the tread of the crowds
who pass through the galleries on Public Days,—the necessity of access
to the specimens on other days preventing their being arranged in
hermetically closed cases.

A Museum of Economic Zoology has been commenced at South Kensington.

There is an unrivalled Zoological Garden or Living Collection, well
situated in the Regent's Park, but not the property of the State, nor
receiving any other than indirect assistance, in the terms on which its
site is granted.

____

The measures which your Memorialists would respectfully urge upon
the consideration of her Majesty's Government, with a view to rendering
the Collections really available for the purposes for which they are
intended, are the following:—

That the Zoological Collections at present existing in the British
Museum be separated into two distinct Collections,—the one to form a Typical
or Popular Museum, the other to constitute the basis of
a complete Scientific Museum.

These Museums might be lodged in one and the same
building, and be under one direction, provided they were arranged in
such a manner as to be separately accessible; so that the one would
always be open to the Public, the other to the man of science, or any
person seeking for special information. This arrangement would involve
no more trouble, and would be as little expensive as any other which
could answer its double purpose, as the Typical or Popular
Museum might at once be made almost complete, and would require
but very slight, if any, additions.

In fact, the plan proposed is only a further development of the
system according to which the Entomological, Conchological, and
Osteological Collections in the British Museum are already worked.

That an appropriate Zoological Library be attached to the
Scientific Museum, totally independent of the Zoological
portion of the Library of the British Museum, which, in the opinion of
your Memorialists, is inseparable from the General Library.

That the Scientific Zoological Museum and Library be
placed under one head, directly responsible to one of her Majesty's
Ministers, or under an organisation similar to that which is
practically found so efficient in regard to Botany.

That the Museum of Economic Zoology at South Kensington
be further developed.

Your Memorialists recommend that the whole of the Kew Herbarium
become the property of, and be maintained by, the State, as is now the
case with a portion of it—that the Banksian Herbarium and the Fossil
Plants be transferred to it from the British Museum—and that a
permanent building be provided for the accommodation at Kew of the
Scientific Museum of Botany so formed.

This consolidation of the Herbaria of Kew with those of the British
Museum would afford the means of including in the Botanical
Scientific Museum a Geographical Botanical Collection for the
illustration of the Colonial Vegetation of the British Empire, which,
considering the extreme importance of vegetable products to the
commerce of this country, your Memorialists are convinced would be felt
to be a great advantage.

Your Memorialists recommend further, that in place of the Banksian
Herbarium and other miscellaneous Botanical Collections now in the
British Museum and closed to the Public, a Typical or Popular
Museum of Botany be formed in the same building as that proposed
for the Typical or Popular Museum of Zoology,
and, like it, be open daily to the Public.

Such a Collection would
require no great space; it would be inexpensive, besides being in the
highest degree instructive; and, like the Typical or Popular
Zoological Collection, it would be of the greatest value to the
public, and to the Teachers and Students of the Metropolitan Colleges.

That the Botanical Scientific Museum and its Library,
the Museum of Economic Botany, and the Botanic
Garden, remain, as at present, under one head, directly
responsible to one of her Majesty's Ministers.

____

The undersigned Memorialists, consisting wholly of Zoologists and
Botanists, have offered no suggestions respecting the very valuable
Mineralogical Collection in the British Museum, although aware that, in
case it should be resolved that the Natural History Collections
generally should be removed to another locality, the disposal of the
Minerals also will probably come under consideration.

November 18, 1858.

GEORGE BENTHAM, V.P.L.S.

GEORGE BUSK, F.R.S. and Z.S., Professor of Comparative Anatomy and
Physiology to the Royal College of Surgeons of England.

WILLIAM B. CARPENTER, M.D., F.R.S., and Z.S., Registrar of the
University of London.

J. S. HENSLOW, F.L.S. and G.S., Professor of Botany in the
University of Cambridge.

THOMAS HUXLEY, F.R.S., Professor of Natural History, Government
School of Mines, Jermyn Street.

JOHN LINDLEY, F.R.S. and L.S., Professor of Botany in University
College, London.

1 This memorial was also published by John Lindley in the Athenaeum, 27 November 1858, pp. 684-5 and by George Bentham in Nature (9 June 1870): 97-8. See also Darwin 1859.

Darwin signed two memorials or petitions that were presented to government in 1858 on the subject of the proposed move of the British Museum's natural history collections to a new site. See Darwin 1858 and Correspondence vol. 7, appendix VI where the memorials are reproduced together with a useful introduction.

2 Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881), chancellor of the exchequer in 1858.

3 William Jackson Hooker (1785-1865), botanist and Director of the Royal Botanic Garden Gardens at Kew, 1841-1865, and father of Joseph Dalton Hooker.

4 John Lindley (1799-1865), professor of botany, University College London, 1829-1860.